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The wireless 'Internet in Space' is coming – driven by the military and global business.
By Allen Gibson,
HomelandDefenseStocks.com
Nov 2004
Just as we’re all getting
used to the number of wires we have to deal with in our daily lives, it seems
that wire-less is about to make its big breakthrough.
From wearable computers, to
using your cellphone to monitor your factory video cameras, to ‘the internet
in space,’ we are in the midst of a technological revolution that looks to be
about to change our lives the way the internet already has.
In war, as in a civil disaster
such as 9-11, good communications is a key to responding in a timely and
effective manner. And that can save lives!
So the US military is spending
$17 Billion dollars to create the first stage of a global, hi-bandwidth,
internet-protocol-based communications network that will use satellites to
create ‘the internet in space.’
One of the drivers of this new
GIG (Global Information Grid), has been John Stenbitt, a former Secretary of
Defence for Command and Control Systems and Intelligence. Stenbitt is “a great
visionary. Without him we wouldn’t have the GIG,” says Christine Anderson,
who is the Director of the MILSATCOM Joint Program Office for the Air Force and
who is responsible for $2 Billion dollars a year in DoD spending.
The GIG is described as a
“Transformative Communications Architecture,” because it’s going to allow
every soldier in the field access to all the
information that’s available, unlike today’s systems where an analyst
somewhere has to decide what’s important and when to send the info down the
line.
Until 25 years ago, says
Stenbitt, the communications model for militaries hadn’t changed since the
Greeks at Sparta. It was what he called “smart push,” which meant you had to
know what to say, and exactly who to say it to.
Stenbitt points to the
“Pueblo” incident with North Korea in ’68 as a classic example of the
drawbacks of the old systems. It took the US 36 hours to decide on a response to
the storming of the boat and get that response back down the line.
Unfortunately, it only took the Koreans 30 hours to hijack the Pueblo and get it
back to their port.
“We missed the boat,” says
Stenbitt. Literally. And that forced the first big change in the communications
architecture, which was to go to a “smart push” approach, where you broadcast
the information, without knowing who was getting it. The broadcast paradigm
worked much better. Still, somebody had to decide what was important enough to
broadcast.
The GIG system, however, will
eliminate that gatekeeper. Instead, the system will be ‘smart pull,’ where all
the data is available all the
time through a global wireless internet. Before long, a Humvee with a 1 foot
antenna will be able to pull information out of the air at megabits per second.
And for those without the antenna, an IP and software-based MESH radio system
will do the trick.
The key to making it work?
Bandwidth. Specifically, cheap bandwidth. Because a lot of people may want the
same bit of information at the same time! And none of this is far off: the
ground-based intranet version of the system will be up and running by next year.
The wireless, satellite based version will follow close behind.
Will there be a role for
private enterprise in the space-based system? Absolutely, according to Rick
Sanford, director of the Global Space Initiatives group at Cisco
Systems, who says “the communications industry has something to
contribute, but the business model as they move into military applications is
still a question mark.”
Cisco spent $3.8 Billion last
year working on the complexities of an architecture that must merge the
technical communications requirements of 20 different protocols from groups as
varied as the DoD, 1st responders, and the Intelligence community.
And this summer their architecture made it into space with the launch of a sat
equipped with an IP-based router.
“Satellites,” he says,
“will have to become software-based, updateable ‘flow-through’ components
of the Net, with the ability to change protocols on the fly as someone who’s
on your team today becomes the enemy tomorrow.”
Getting satellites to adapt
that quickly is a huge challenge. It has taken 10 years to upgrade the
communications protocol on our sat systems, while on the ground it takes only 2.
But the change is coming. According to Adrian Morris of Hughes
Spaceway System, sat transfer speeds will more than double within the
next year and a half. And while “sats are a hub and spoke system now, they
will be a Mesh system in the future.”
Such a Mesh system, with 10
Gigabyte capacities, will allow selective multicasts of information, local
broadcasts, point-to-point, or whatever other structure is needed, all with a
signal quality that is ‘close to HDTV’, according to Morris.
In the meantime:
Those of us who aren’t IN the
military, however, don’t have to feel all that left out. In fact, it is the
corporate and commercial worlds that are driving much of the innovation that is
leading to the GIG.
Cisco Systems notes that
commercial enterprises have a role to play in space-based systems now because
the needs of users – military and otherwise – have converged. In the not too
distant future, they suggest, every manned and unmanned vehicle in the world
will be a node on a network, as the OnStar system previews today.
Which business applications are
going to be winners in this new wireless world are still to be determined, but
many companies are working to position themselves now to take advantage of this
lucrative market.
For most of us, before our car
gets net-connected, it will be our cell phone that links us to the world net.
And already we are seeing innovative new applications emerging for the cell.
A small company called Snocone
Systems has developed a server-side software package that turns any
WAP-enabled cellphone ( which is most new phones) into a remote monitoring
device for closed circuit television cameras. A factory owner can now see, in
real time, the images from his security cameras, and even control camera
movement through his cell. The benefits are obvious.
Also using cellphones as part
of their information solution, Roaming
Messenger puts together ‘smart packets’ of info that will search
through the wired and wireless
worlds until they find who they’re looking for, in order to provide critical
information in a real time environment.
Another
company, Aegis Assessments, has
developed products that provide wireless security solutions that essentially
make buildings talk! Recognizing that the most significant life threatening
public safety incidents, take place in or around large buildings, the Company
designed and built products that assist first responders in being able to
protect life and property. Sensors within a building such as a school or
government office will give police and fire responders crucial information about
the state of the building and its occupants in the event of an emergency.
And
if smart phones and smart buildings aren’t enough, how about a smart handbag,
or smart curtains? Both are possible, thanks to some new
technology coming out of MIT’s MediaLab.
To make a bag that prevents people forgetting things, scientists at the Lab have
equipped fabric modules with radio antennas or receivers. The fabric
is programmed to listen for signals from radio frequency identification (RFID)
tags – on objects like cellphones, keys and wallets. Other modules detect when
the bag has been picked up, which triggers a reader to check the objects the
module has been programmed to look for. If it does not detect a required item,
it uses a voice synthesiser module in another patch to warn you’ve forgotten
your keys. The modules are held together with velcro that has been coated to
relay the electrical signals between modules.
Dozens of other uses for
wireless technology are also going to emerge, obviously. One of the keys to
success, according to a recent article in The Economist called ‘Make it
Simple’, will be to design products that don’t add to the increasingly
overwhelming complexity of modern life. From venture capitalists who specialise
in funding tech to the boss of the desktop for Microsoft, experts pretty much
agree that technology has not made life simpler.
“Moreover,” the article notes, “the boundaries between
office, car and home will become increasingly blurred and will eventually
disappear altogether. In rich countries, virtually the entire population will be
expected to be permanently connected to the internet, both as employees and as
consumers.”
If we don’t get our wires
crossed, we are headed for an interesting future!
Allen
R. Gibson
Allen R.
Gibson has over twenty-five years of experience in media and corporate
communications. He has been a reporter, television producer, and marketing
communications consultant for public companies in both the US and Canada.
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